LDCs RECORDED AN IMPRESSIVE PERFORMANCE IN GDP – REPORT
United Nations Resident Coordinator in
Tanzania, Dr. Alberic Kacou speaks to invited dignitaries during the
official launching of the Least Developed Countries Report 2013 today at
the ILO conference room in Dar es Salaam.
.2013 LDCs report launches today in Dar
. Demographic growth still a huge challenge to LDCs countries including Tanzania
--
By Damas Makangale, MOblog
The Least Developed Countries Report
2013 has indicated that despite the slow global recovery, real Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) growth in the LDCs has picked up from 4.5 per
cent in 2011 to 5.3 percent in 2012.
The LDCs report that was prepared by
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) which was
launched today said that the demographic change affects the
environmental and socio-economic development of all countries, but
especially the most vulnerable of the LDCs.
The report said that although the
proportion of people in those countries who live on less than USD 1.25
per day (in extreme poverty) has declined, the number has continued to
rise due to high population growth.
Report explained further that equally
worrisome is the fact that the LDCs working age population will increase
on average by 15.7 million people per year between 2010 and 2050 and in
11 LDCs by at least 0.5 million a year.
The report underscored that the
projected increases are highest in the African LDCs including, Tanzania,
where population will expand by more than 1 million people a year and
the situation will pose a major employment and development challenge for
the LDCs.
“Faced with the high fertility rates
which averaging 4.4 children per woman during the period of 2005 -2010,
the realization of a potential demographic dividend (where the
dependency ratio is at its lowest) will require increased investment in
the training, education and employment of youth,”
Ambassador Maral Namfua addresses the
invited dignitaries and reporters during the official launching of the
LDCs report 2013 which highlighted the challenges of employment and
demographic increases in LDCs countries especially in Africa.
“The LDCs demographic growth dynamics,
together with the expanding youth bulge, will mean declining dependency
ratios but a growing labour supply,” the report statement said.
The report said that the demographic
increases is a challenge for LDCs countries including Tanzania with 70
per cent population composed of youth who are below the age of 30; which
begs the question, how to create productive jobs and sustainably raise
living standards of the population?
On his part United Nations Resident
Coordinator in Tanzania, Alberic Kacou said that LDCs reports provide a
comprehensive source of socio-economic analysis and data on the world’s
most impoverished countries.
He said that this year the Report has a
more special theme: Growth with employment for inclusive and sustainable
development, under that theme the report examines the link between
investment, growth and employment.
Kacou added that more specifically, it
considers how LDCs can promote growth that generates an adequate number
of quality jobs and that enables them to reach what UNCTAD believes are
their most urgent and pivotal goals, both now and in the post-2015
development agenda: poverty reduction, inclusive growth and sustainable
development.
The report notes that, in most LDCs, the
main source of employment for the growing labour force is still
agriculture. However, a high concentration of labour in agriculture
combined with low productivity implies low and even declining living
standards for rural populations.
As a result more and more young people
are seeking work outside agriculture, and urban centres are increasingly
becoming the main attraction, hence rapidly urbanizing the LDCs
population.
United Nations Resident Coordinator in
Tanzania, Alberic Kacou and Ambassador Maral Namfua and International
Labour Organization Deputy Country Director Ms.Hopolang Phororo cuts a
ribbon to officiate the LDCs report 2013 in Dar es Salaam at the ILO
conference room.
Kacou went on to say that in such a
context, the Report proposes a policy framework that links investment
with growth and employment creation to generate inclusive and
sustainable development.
“The framework is based on the
assumption that maximizing the employment creation potential of growth
will not happen without the development of productive capacities which
are: the productive resources; entrepreneurial capabilities and
production linkages,” He said.
The Report further explains that the
development of productive capacities occurs through economic processes
that countries have to undergo for sustained development. These are; the
investment necessary to build domestic capital stock (physical capital,
human capital, and so forth), which economists refer to as capital
accumulation; structural change (or structural transformation); and
building the capabilities of the domestic enterprise sector.
However, the question is how to
practically integrate these synergies into a framework for optimizing
employment, which also requires choosing policies that do not contradict
one another.
United Nations Resident Coordinator in
Tanzania, Alberic Kacou displays a LDCs report to reporters (not in a
picture) right is ILO Deputy Director Ms. Hopolang Phororo and left is
Ambasssador Maral Namfua.
Some of High Commissioners and Ambassadors attended a launching ceremony at the ILO conference room.
Some of the invited dignitaries and participants are following up the launching ceremony of LDCs report 2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment